Cape Argus

Bid to stop nullificat­ion of rerun poll

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NAIROBI: Kenya’s ruling Jubilee Party yesterday presented parliament with proposals intended to prevent the country’s Supreme Court from annulling the results of a coming rerun presidenti­al election, as it did the last vote in August.

The court struck down President Uhuru Kenyatta’s poll victory then, saying there had been illegaliti­es and irregulari­ties in the transmissi­on of results.

Kenya used two systems to transmit results from polling stations – paper forms and the electronic transmissi­on of the vote tallies plus scanned copies of the forms. The court found flaws in both. Jubilee’s proposed amendments to election law would stop the court

from invalidati­ng results if the electronic transmissi­on again fails to work smoothly.

The manually transmitte­d results would be final, a copy of the amendments showed. The re-run vote is scheduled for October 26 and opposition challenger Raila Odinga’s coalition has said it will not take part unless the proposed changes are dropped, calling them “sanitisati­on of the flaws of the August 8 vote”.

The amendments would also prevent the court from voiding an election on the grounds of non-compliance with the law, provided the poll was held in line with constituti­onal principles and the non-compliance did not affect the result of the election.

The president, two dissenting Supreme Court judges and some legal commentato­rs have faulted the court’s majority ruling for failing to explain how the illegaliti­es cited interfered with the result of the election.

Kenyatta said last week the ruling by the Supreme Court threatened to thrust the country into “judicial chaos”, as lower courts use the precedent to invalidate other elected positions.

Odinga has called for street protests to force out senior officials from the electoral board.

Hundreds of University of Nairobi students fought running battles with police around their campus yesterday, as they protested against the detention of an opposition legislator.

Paul Ongili Owino was re-arrested on Wednesday, shortly after being released on bail on charges of subversion for calling Kenyatta a “son of a dog” at a campaign rally on Sunday.

He was arraigned again in court yesterday on new charges of an assault causing “grievous harm” to a voter during the campaign for last month’s election. – Reuters

 ?? PICTURE: AP ?? PROTEST: Supporters of opposition leader Raila Odinga demonstrat­e anti-IEBC at Ngong Road in Nairobi, Kenya, on Tuesday.
PICTURE: AP PROTEST: Supporters of opposition leader Raila Odinga demonstrat­e anti-IEBC at Ngong Road in Nairobi, Kenya, on Tuesday.

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